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Welcome to the group Jean. I'll forgive you for making
an ass of yourself in your first post. It is easy to make hasty remarks that cannot be retracted. Why don't you introduce yourself. You must work for US Sailing in some capacity. Please elaborate. My statement about the ASA and US Sailing being nearly identical is with regards to their keelboat training programs. ASA is not involved with racing as you know. While US Sailing on the other hand, has it's roots in racing--it is too bad they did not stay with their expertise. So you think the clients of ASA are yuppies? That is funny! If you knew anything about sail training you would know that the "people" who take such courses span all age groups. If any group dominated, it would be middle aged people--not yuppies. I've taught over 700 people to sail from children to one man nearly 100 years old. Empty-nester are the most common students. Furthermore, the demographics of ASA sailing school students are identical to the clients of sailing schools following US Sailing certifications. So what is the point of your bizarre statement? You seem to imply sailing students are a bunch of dolts. Perhaps you grew up with sailing and this is the reason for your arrogant attitude. Many of my students have become fine sailors through their love of the sport. I'd be willing to bet they have better skills than yours in some areas. I congratulate them while my opinion of you has dropped yet another notch. US Sailing has been knocking ASA for eleven years. US Sailing claims it has a higher standard and tells everyone that the ASA standard is lower. In the mid 1990's, a few sailing schools petitioned US Sailing to add training to it's charter. US Sailing was reluctant to accept this role. They left its organization up to these same sailing school owners. This is part of the reason this program has faults today.The owners of these sailing schools dominate the training program--which means a few profit motivated people--sailing school owners, and their employees/instructors/stooges dominate decision making in the area of sail training. The imply they hold all the necessary expertise and no one else has anything to offer. These people slapped something together and naturally they think it is better that the ASA program--that does not make it so. Since you are knocking ASA you must belong to US Sailing and believe all their party propaganda. Of course they want you to believe US Sailing's sail training is better. Give them ten more years and it might become true. Right now, I can tell you for a fact that US Sailing has serious weakness in it's keelboat training program. Specifically, ASA is far superior in the area of instructor training. I can give an unbiased viewpoint because I have taken part in both training programs. I've also taught at five different sailing schools over a period of 25 years. I don't like ASA. I don't like US Sailing either. Neither group treats their instructors well. For the best introduction to boating and sailing I'd rate the US Power Squadron courses as the best available. Their navigation classes in particular are outstanding and the best in the nation. However, ASA and US Sailing focus on practical training on the water in keelboats--not power boats. So let us compare them. The courses offered? Both ASA and US Sailing have identical course names, identical material, and they are viewed as identical by charter companies. Charter companies only care if you can anchor, motor, and dock, and that you have money and the boat back in one piece. They don't care about certifications. Both ASA and US Sailing have done a good job convincing people that these are good things to have. The reality is skills count--not the certification. Both ASA and US Sailing took their course outlines from the same source, the RYA. Of course the RYA thinks they are the best--at least the RYA can justify this by virtue of doing this sort of training longer than anyone else. I will concede the RYA program is probably the best with the caveat that if the courses are identical then the programs should be equated. US Sailing cannot use RYA logic to claim it is the best in the US because it hasn't been around as long as the ASA. US Sailing is the newcomer in the US and this is why they perform poorly in the area of instructor training. So what can US Sailing do but repeatedly state that their standard is better since they have no evidence to support this. If they did, they would use it. US Sailing Instructor Trainer's lack consistency. There is fact no standard for their Instructor Trainers (ITs). For years I've pushed US Sailing to develop a standard for their IT's because I felt one of their IT's was grossly unqualified and other has such divergent viewpoints that students were left confused and disgusted. I'm told a standard for US Sailing ITs is now under development. I remain doubtful One argument I've heard is the ASA never flunks an instructor candidate. Perhaps this is true. My experience was the instructor candidates were generally well qualified and the ASA instructor trainers actually provided valuable training during the course. I have seen US Sailing IT's flunk candidates. In one case it was justified. I fault US Sailing for accepting a candidate without the necessary qualifications. In the other case the candidate should not have been flunked. He was failed in a case in which the root cause of the problem was the design of the boat he was being evaluated on. Specifically, the Colgate 26 has a tendency to stall the keel in certain situations. I fault the instructor trainer in this case for not understanding the characteristics of the boat being used for the evaluation. While US Sailing is technically a Non-Profit, why then is it they are trying to drive the ASA, out of business? Clearly US Sailing sees itself as a For-Profit business if this is the case. They make no effort to integrate their program with the ASA program. They will not grant equivalency to ASA instructor credentials because this undermines their own programs. This self-serving attitude is to the detriment of sailing instructors and favors sailing schools using the US Sailing certification standard. Perhaps someday the ASA will sue US Sailing. I would be glad to testify that US Sailing Instructor Trainers make this sort of statement often, without direct knowledge or experience of the ASA instructor training program. I think it would be an easy battle for the ASA to win in court. From a students perspective, there is no difference between ASA and US Sailing's Keelboat training programs. Since US Sailing is driving away members, it claim to being "the governing body of the sport", is laughable propaganda. When asked, I will continue to tell my sailing students not to join US Sailing unless they absolutely have to in order to race; that they don't have to join if they are crew; and that they don't have to enter a race officially, to participate. I eagerly await your response Jean. Try to come up with some credible arguments next time. "Jean Pudl" wrote Bart Senior wrote: Both groups are virtually identical yet they don't accept each others standards! Absurd! Each of these groups is FOR PROFIT, not for sailing. Right. One group is For Profit, focuses almost entirely on charging yuppies to train them for sailing their first boat or bare boat charter and was created about 20 years ago. The other is a Non-Profit organization that deals with all aspects of the sport, is the National Governing Body for much of the racing in the US, develops and manages the handicap systems (IMS, PHRF, Americap, etc) and is over 100 years old. I can see why you think they're virtually identical. |
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